Have you ever asked someone how they’re doing and heard them reply, “I’m surviving,” or “I’ve survived another year”? It doesn’t seem like much of a victory to consider yourself as having merely survived your life.
Survival is necessary—yes, because we must survive the experience to tell the tale. But is it where we wish to remain?
Generally, survivor stories originate from a negative or traumatic episode. We don’t describe getting married as surviving being single, or having a child as surviving childlessness. We may declare we’ve survived poverty before landing a dream job or the big break, but we wouldn’t call ourselves survivors—we’d call ourselves thrivers. And rightly so. Because it’s the thriving mindset that allowed the leap.
Thriving isn’t treading water, waiting to be rescued. It’s the mindset that finds dry land and builds a life upon it.
Surviving is either finding a way to stop drowning or being rescued from it. Thriving is learning to swim afterwards, and doing everything in your power to ensure it doesn’t happen again.
You win some. You lose some. But if you learn from every experience, you win. Every time.
This is what psychologists refer to as post-traumatic Growth—a phenomenon that cannot be accessed by someone who remains deeply identified as a survivor or victim. To truly thrive, a person must be willing to consider every alternative to the life they’re living now and select the most empowering version, while knowing it is very hard work. They must be prepared to systematically dismantle the outdated narrative and choose the one that allows them to flourish.

To do this, the individual must envision a future in which they are triumphant—thriving over the current obstacle that introspection has revealed. They must begin crafting, speaking, and living the story they choose to represent them. This is what thriving means.
What you’ve survived can become a victory—if you think of yourself as a victor. What you’ve learned, how you’ve grown, and who you’ve expanded into—the more experienced, resourceful, courageous version of yourself—has been drawn by conscious choice from the ocean of infinite possibilities. This ocean is present in every moment.
Why does it matter to understand that countless versions of you exist across infinite timelines?
This idea, drawn from quantum mechanics, explores the many life paths you could take based on your present-moment choices. There is a field of infinite possibilities available to you, and your thoughts, words, and actions are what draw one of those paths into form.
The most potent draw is thought.
Thought is the genesis of all creativity. It’s a boomerang—what you put out will return. What you focus on expands.
When you focus on a timeline where you’re living your ultimate life, it creates contrast with your current one. You sense the gap. And when you focus on a timeline where you’re worse off than now, it creates a reprieve—“at least I’m not there.” This is the rationale behind declaring yourself a survivor—you’re here, still breathing, and that is no small thing.
But surviving isn’t the goal, it’s an interim measure. Thriving is the goal.
Thriving demands risk. It means letting go of the survival identity and daring to widen your lens. It requires asking: How willing am I to risk change? How open am I to crafting a different narrative?
Yes, risk.
Thriving will come at the cost of your survival. You must be willing to pay yourself first.
That’s the first rule in wealth accumulation—and a necessary condition of life designed to Thrive.
Originally Published on https://akasha111blog.wordpress.com/